Stuck between soybeans and state-capitalist China, does President Trump have enough ammo to make Xi sing uncle, or will he ultimately backtrack on his latest trade threats in the face of daunting electoral math? Here’s a look at where China’s proposed retaliatory tariffs on soybeans would sting most for the US president.
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Ian Bremmer's Quick Take: US Secretary of State Tony Blinken just came from China, Beijing, and Shanghai, and the US-China relationship continues to be better managed and more stable than we've seen in a long time. Not clear that would necessarily be the case, given the number of issues and places where we have friction between these two countries.
Hard Numbers: Xi visits Europe, Gaza pier costs skyrocket, Philippines gets too hot for school, Cat survives return flight
April 29, 2024
5: Next week, Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit Europe for the first time in five years, stopping in France, Serbia, and Hungary.
(Photo by Elisa Gestri/Sipa USA)
Arrests and crackdowns span from New York and Texas to Egypt and Jordan.
Borja Puig de la Bellacasa/Pool via REUTERS
After nearly a week of uncertainty, Pedro Sánchez, the Spanish prime minister, announced he would remain the country’s leader.
PA via Reuters
On Monday, Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s first minister and leader of the Scottish National Party, announced he would resign following a controversial move last week to end the SNP’s power-sharing agreement with the Scottish Green Party.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Japan’s currency slipped to 160 yen to the dollar on Monday, its lowest rate since 1990, triggering a government intervention and threatening Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s position.
REUTERS/Simon Kwong TW/CP
Taiwan’s government has pledged to remove over 700 statues of Chiang Kai-shek, the former leader responsible for Taiwan’s independence and decades of authoritarian rule.
The Egyptian government has not taken kindly to pro-Palestinian protests that have also aimed at Cairo’s diplomatic ties with Israel.
Does President Macron in France, thinks that Europe can't rely on the United States for its defense no longer? Does the resurgence of the radical right in any way impair the celebration in Portugal that is 50 years since the coup, the revolution that overturned the dictatorship? Carl Bildt, former prime minister of Sweden, shares his perspective on European politics from Stockholm.
“We are back in a period of superpower competition that will probably go on for decades. And that, if we're lucky, remains a cold war.” David Sanger, Pulitzer prize-winning national security correspondent for The New York Times, joins Ian Bremmer on GZERO World to offer a clear-eyed take on America’s adversaries.
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